Muirhead V E, Quiñonez C, Figueiredo R, Locker D
Faculty of Dentistry, Division of Oral Health and Society, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2009 Jun;37(3):199-208. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0528.2009.00471.x.
This study used the Gelberg-Andersen Behavioral Model for Vulnerable Populations to identify predictors of dental care utilization by working poor Canadians.
A cross-sectional stratified sampling study design and telephone survey methodology was used to collect data from a nationally representative sample of 1049 working poor individuals aged 18 to 64 years. Working poor persons worked > or = 20 h a week, were not full-time students and had annual family incomes <$34,300. A pretested questionnaire included sociodemographic items, self-reported oral health measures and two dental care utilization outcomes: time since their last dental visit and the usual reason for dental visits.
Hierarchical stepwise logistic analyses identified independent predictors associated with visiting the dentist >1 year ago: male gender (OR = 1.63; P = 0.005), aged 25-34 years (OR = 2.05; P = 0.02), paying for dental care with cash or credit (OR = 2.31; P < 0.001), past welfare recipients (OR = 1.65; P = 0.03), <21 teeth (OR = 4.23; P < 0.001) and having a perceived need for dental treatment (OR=2.78; P < 0.001). Sacrificing goods or services to pay for dental treatment was associated with visiting the dentist within the past year. The predictors of visiting the dentist only when in pain/trouble were lone parent status (OR = 4.04; P < 0.001), immigrant status (OR = 1.72; P = 0.006), paying for dental care with cash or credit (OR = 2.71; P < 0.001), a history of an inability to afford dental care (OR = 1.62; P = 0.01), a satisfactory/poor/very poor self-rated oral health (OR = 2.10; P < 0.001), number of teeth <21 (OR = 2.58; P < 0.001) and having a perceived need for dental treatment (OR = 2.99; P < 0.001).
This study identified predisposing and enabling vulnerabilities that jeopardize the dental care-seeking practices of working poor persons. Dental care utilization was associated with relinquishing spending on other goods and services, which suggests that dental care utilization is a competing financial demand for economically constrained adults.
本研究采用格尔伯格 - 安德森弱势群体行为模型来确定加拿大在职贫困人口牙科护理利用情况的预测因素。
采用横断面分层抽样研究设计和电话调查方法,从1049名年龄在18至64岁的全国代表性在职贫困人口样本中收集数据。在职贫困人口每周工作≥20小时,不是全日制学生,家庭年收入<$34,300。一份经过预测试的问卷包括社会人口学项目、自我报告的口腔健康指标以及两个牙科护理利用结果:上次看牙以来的时间和看牙的常见原因。
分层逐步逻辑分析确定了与1年多以前看牙相关的独立预测因素:男性(比值比[OR]=1.63;P = 0.005)、年龄25 - 34岁(OR = 2.05;P = 0.02)、用现金或信用卡支付牙科护理费用(OR = 2.31;P < 0.001)、过去接受过福利救济(OR = 1.65;P = 0.03)、牙齿少于21颗(OR = 4.23;P < 0.001)以及认为需要牙科治疗(OR = 2.78;P < 0.001)。为支付牙科治疗费用而牺牲商品或服务与过去一年内看牙有关。仅在疼痛/出现问题时才看牙的预测因素包括单亲身份(OR = 4.04;P < 0.001)、移民身份(OR = 1.72;P = 0.006)、用现金或信用卡支付牙科护理费用(OR = 2.71;P < 0.001)、有无力承担牙科护理费用的历史(OR = 1.62;P = 0.01)、自我评定的口腔健康状况为满意/差/非常差(OR = 2.10;P < 0.001)、牙齿数量少于21颗(OR = 2.58;P < 0.001)以及认为需要牙科治疗(OR = 2.99;P < 0.001)。
本研究确定了影响在职贫困人口寻求牙科护理行为的易感性和促成性脆弱因素。牙科护理利用与减少在其他商品和服务上的支出有关,这表明牙科护理利用对经济受限的成年人来说是一种竞争性的财务需求。